The Algae photograph

The Algae

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Originally published 1962
AuthorsVal Chapman
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID2967049
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About The Algae


This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important, and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it. This work was reproduced from the original artifact, and remains as true to the original work as possible. . . .

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... In the Antarctic, The Algae that cling to the ice are a source of food for the small crustaceans known as krill, which are a basic food resource for whales, seals, penguins and other birds...

Algae that blights our seas is harvested to make useful products

Algae that blights our seas is harvested to make useful products
Jan 22,2023 9:21 pm

... Now The Algae is being harvested alongside farmed crops to create ingredients for cosmetics and food products...

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... The Algae are hard because they contain a chalk-like substance in their cell walls, and this allows large solid structures to grow over time...

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... Bleaching occurs when under-stress corals expel The Algae living within them that gives them colour and life...

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... " Generally we find them at shallower depths, " he told BBC News, because The Algae that lives within the bodies of corals needs light...

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... The Algae needs sunlight and nutrients such as nitrogen and phosphate, and a Sunny start to the month of may helped the cells grow quickly...

Algae that blights our seas is harvested to make useful products

Jun 11,2020 4:02 am

By Jo HarperReporting

Excessive outbreaks of seaweed are clogging up waters from The Caribbean to the Baltic. Now The Algae is being harvested alongside farmed crops to create ingredients for cosmetics and food products.

Mari Granström says it was her passion for scuba diving that opened Her Eyes to the continuing problem of toxic algae blooms in the Baltic Sea .

The outbreaks occur when tiny cyanobacteria, also called blue-green algae, suddenly multiply rapidly, stretching out on top of the water for potentially kilometres.

Also called eutrophication, it is a form of marine suffocation, and it is a significant environmental concern in the Baltic Sea . It can occur in 97% of the total area of The Sea ,

The blooms impact on other Marine Life , by causing oxygen deficiency, reducing water quality, and blocking out light.

The Problem is caused by too many nutrients entering the water, typically nitrogen and phosphorus from artificial fertilisers. These are carried into The Sea by the rivers of the surrounding Countries - Denmark , Estonia, Finland, Germany, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Russia and Sweden.

While the use of such fertilisers has reduced in recent years, the Baltic Marine Environment Protection Commission, the intergovernmental organisation that aims to improve water quality in The Sea , says.

Some Six Years ago Ms Granström, a Finnish biochemist, determined to tackle The Problem herself. She'd harvest The Algae and use it to make ingredients for a host of products. In addition to cosmetics and human food, The Algae extracts can be used in detergents, Animal Feed , and even packaging materials.

This comes as there is as a replacement to oil-based ingredients.

" I saw with My Own Eyes - or perhaps couldn't See - how it was affecting The Marine ecosystem, and decided to Do Something , " she says. " There was too much finger pointing and not enough action. "

Ms Granström says she worked on The Project as " a hobby for a long time" before in 2019 setting up a company called Origin by Ocean (ObO). She is The Chief executive.

The Business , which has attracted both commercial investment and European Union funds, is now continuing with a pilot production scheme ahead of aiming to be fully operational by 2025-26.

ObO collects The Algae off the coast of Finland, where it is sucked on to boats And Then separated from the water. The Firm is also importing invasive sargassum seaweed from the Dominican Republic in The Caribbean .

Vast blooms of that algae have " There are 25 million tonnes of sargassum blooming in The Caribbean every year, " says Ms Granström.

" It stops people fishing and harms tourism. We Are now buying several tonnes of sargassum from the Dominican Republic , and this volume will increase. "

The Company further sources unwanted seaweed from Portuguese and Spanish waters.

ObO's pilot processing is done at a facility in northern Sweden. It uses a patented biorefinery technology it calls " Nauvu" to separate The Algae into numerous useable materials.

These are then sold to food, cosmetics, textiles, packing and agricultural companies.

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To help grow The Business ObO is working with one of its investors, Finnish chemicals and industrial group Kiilto. " If this can be successfully scaled up here, then ObO can replicate similar processes around the globe, " says Ville Solja, Kiilto's chief business development officer.

ObO already has plans to Set Up a refinery in the Dominican Republic .

Across in Sweden, a separate business called Nordic Seafarm is showing just how versatile seaweed can be.

" We make algae-based gin and beer, both locally produced, " says director Fredrik Gröndahl.

Nordic Seafarm, which grows its own seaweed, is a commercial spin-off from Seafarm, a Swedish government-funded project that helps commercialise aquaculture research.

" If this market [for seaweed] gets big, and we think it will, We Are ready to scale up, " adds Prof Gröndahl, who is also project leader of Seafarm, and head of department for sustainable development, Environmental Science and engineering at The Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm.

" Just imagine if Ikea asked for algae-based meatballs globally, which could happen. "

Prof Gröndahl also hopes that in The Future algae will become a key ingredient in Animal Feed , to replace environmentally-damaging fish meal, which is common in pigs and poultry diets. " Algae is also cheaper than existing ingredients as there is no cost for feeding and irrigation. "

Back at ObO, Ms Granström says the aim is for shoppers around The World to " play a part in Cleaning Up the Baltic Sea " by simply buying A Number of consumer products.

" We wanted to Do Something to help at both ends of The Process , upstream and downstream, as it were - Cleaning the seas, but also monetising a change in Consumer Behaviour . "



Source of news: bbc.com

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